Quote Originally Posted by britewire
The mycorrhiza fungi are specific group of fungi that act as a symbiot with the plant. In exchange for glucose that the plant produces it will take over and help the plant with a couple of important tasks like:

-Taking in nutrients
-Taking in water
-Soil structure improvement
-Better resistancy against diseases and "bad" fungi

The mycorrhiza looks like a net through the ground and acts like additional rooting. I've been experimenting with it for a while now and I get much better results since.

You might want to look in to it.

Source: www.mycorrhiza.com/

greetz,

Britewire
Yumm Fungus
karmaxul Reviewed by karmaxul on . Mycorrhizae Mycorrhizae: Some soil fungi form mycorrhizae (intimate associations between fungi and roots of plants). The fungi acts as additional roots, helping the plant acquire nutrients. Probably, most plants have mycorrhizae, but some mycorrhizae associations, such as those between basidiomycete and beech, birch and pine trees, are particularly abundant in forest soils of temperate regions. The fungal mycelium penetrates the outermost layers of the tree root, but most of the mycelium remains Rating: 5